• Pol. Arch. Med. Wewn. · Aug 2022

    Review

    Molecular cytogenetics in acute myeloid leukemia in adult patients: practical implications.

    • Krzysztof Mrózek.
    • Comprehensive Cancer Center, Clara D. Bloomfield Center for Leukemia Outcomes Research, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, United States. krzysztof.mrozek@osumc.edu
    • Pol. Arch. Med. Wewn. 2022 Aug 22; 132 (7-8).

    AbstractThroughout the last 50 years, cytogenetic analyses of pretreatment bone marrow and / or blood samples from patients diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) revealed a large number of recurring chromosome aberrations, both structural and numerical. Using standard banding methods and, more recently, molecular cytogenetic techniques, such as fluorescence in situ hybridization, spectral karyotyping, multiplex fluorescence in situ hybridization and comparative genomic hybridization, cytogenetic investigations detect acquired abnormalities that, together with submicroscopic gene mutations and changes in gene expression, strongly influence the clinical features and prognosis of patients with AML. Selected reciprocal translocations and inversions and their molecular counterparts, as well as a number of unbalanced chromosome abnormalities are used, together with bone marrow morphology, immunophenotype, and clinical characteristics, to define separate AML entities in the World Health Organization Classification of Haematolymphoid Tumours. Moreover, cytogenetic findings (and specific gene mutations) are being used in geneticrisk classifications, such as the 2022 European LeukemiaNet classification. Such classifications divide patients into broad prognostic categories: favorable, intermediate, and adverse, which are useful in the management of adults with AML. In this article, I review the present data on recurrent chromosome rearrangements in AML and on correlations between cytogenetic findings and clinical features and treatment outcomes of adult patients diagnosed with AML.

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